People are queuing up to take photos at the spot pictured, from which Lake Wanaka can be seen stretching out.
The photo shows Troy and Jayne Nielsen on Roys Peak on their wedding day in September 2014. After a three-hour climb, some tourists are waiting for up to half an hour for the chance to pose for that special photo.
Swiss tourist Sarah Payer said she and a friend were in the queue this week.
"Yeah, we probably had to wait for half an hour to get it [the photo]. All the people were standing in a queue so everyone could take the pictures they wanted to."
The track opened for the summer season two weeks ago, and the climb car park, at the bottom of the hill beside Wanaka-Mt Aspiring Rd, is double the size it was last year.
About 150 people are expected to make the climb each day over summer.
The best advice from tourists coming back from the peak seemed to be to make an early start.
The Queenstown Lakes District Council yesterday painted yellow no-stopping lines along the road leading to the new car park.
The new lines are intended to stop people parking on the side of the road to make the area safer.
Anyone parking there can get a ticket.
The council is also building a gravel track linking the Roys Peak Track car park to the Damper Bay track, as a safer means for walkers to move between the two tracks.